narrator · Fourteen-year-old Lily narrates the novel in retrospect,
from the house where she now lives with the Boatwright sisters.

point of view · Lily narrates the novel in the first-person, describing
the events she experiences from her unique perspective and retelling
the stories others tell her in the same manner.

tone · Lily’s tone resembles the tone a child would effect
when narrating a story in his or her diary, except with less self-loathing and
more romantic language. Kidd relies on vivid imagery and poetic
devices to help elevate the tone.

tense · Past

setting (time) ·
1964

setting (place) · Sylvan and Tiburon, South Carolina

protagonist · Lily Owens

major conflict · Motherless Lily lives unhappily with her emotionally
detached father, who claims that Lily, as a small child, accidentally
killed her mother. When her black maid—and only friend—Rosaleen gets
arrested for confronting three racists, Lily decides to break Rosaleen
out of jail. Together they run away to a place Lily suspects her
mother once spent time.

rising action · Once the Boatwright sisters take her in, Lily must
come to terms with the reality of who her mother actually was. Meanwhile,
Lily struggles to understand the importance of the surrogate mothers she
has found in Tiburon.

climax · The book has a string of climaxes that occur in rapid
succession. First, Lily’s sweetheart, Zach, an African American,
gets arrested for being with a group of friends when someone throws
a glass bottle at a white man. Immediately after, May Boatwright commits
suicide when she hears the news about Zach, and the other two Boatwright
sisters (August and June) begin to mourn their loss. At the same
time, Lily finally confesses to August the truth about her past,
namely that she killed her mother and broke Rosaleen out of jail.

falling action · Lily confronts her father, T. Ray, and August convinces
him that Lily should stay in Tiburon.

themes · The irrationality of racism; the power of female community;
the importance of storytelling

motifs · Bees; epigraphs; mothers

symbols · Beehives; photographs; the black Mary

foreshadowing · The novel opens with Lily watching bees fly around
her bedroom. These bees foreshadow Lily’s interaction with the Boatwright
sisters at August’s bee farm.

Someone in my class had this problem, probably from looking on this page as well. The No. 3 Quote is wrong. In the book the quote is about impossibility after talking about being in love with zach and it says "THE WORD (impossible) IS A GREAT BIG LOG THROWN ON THE FIRES OF LOVE"